In 2017, according to the Digital Barometer (co-funded by the Digital Agency) 66% of employed people (salaried or non-salaried) use a computer at their workplace (only 53% in 2013).
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The proportion of employed workers who use a computer every day at work has increased from 46% in 2013 to 54% in 2017.
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The socio-professional category reveals very clear divisions: more than eight out of ten executives or higher intellectual professions declare using a computer every day at work, compared to less than one worker in five.
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The same is true for the level of education: 75% of university graduates use a computer every day at work, compared to 17% of blue-collar workers.
One in three workers brings and uses personal equipment at work
https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/lvDzZ/1/One-third of working people say they bring personal equipment such as a smartphone or tablet to their workplace to use for work. More than half of working people 18 and older never do.
44% of people living in the Paris area bring personal equipment to work every day, compared to an average of 34% of all employed people.
Bringing your smartphone or personal tablet to work every day for professional purposes is strongly correlated to your profession: two thirds of self-employed people (farmers, craftsmen, shopkeepers, business owners) naturally use their personal digital objects for professional purposes.
Executives and higher intellectual professions also do so more often than average, as do higher education graduates, people living in high-income households and men, as well as residents of the Paris metropolitan area (44% versus 34% of all employed persons on average).
On the occasion of the seminar "Work in the Digital Age", the Directorate for Research, Studies and Statistics (
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